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OlihtwMWi K 1 ndn*M.
‘‘"Won't you hare another piece of
pie, Mr. Olaverly ?” asked Tommie.
"Thank you, Tommie,” replied Mr.
Claverly, “it’s very kind of you.”
"Oh, that’s all right,” returned
Tommie, with energy. “I’m a-lookin’
out for myself, too. Ma said if it was
necessary to cut another pie, I could
have two pieces. ”—Harlem Life.
The Waste, of Siberia
Are not more barren of comfort than the
waists of those who suffer from dyspepsia,
from liver complaint or from kidney trouble.
But in Hostetter's Stomach Bitters they can
find relief. So can the malarious, the rheu-
matie, the neuralgic, the feeble and Ihe old.
Use with persistence this remedy with s
career of over a third of a century. A wine-
glassful three times a day.
Let every man briar what he can and add
it to the heap for the general good.
Dr. Kilmer’s Swamp-Root cure-
all Kidney and Bladder troubles.
Pamphlet and Consultation free.
Laboratory Binghamton. N. V
A virtuous effort is sometimes frozen with
cold admiration and sullen neglect.
The management of the A. & W. P. R. R-. al¬
ways* alive to the comfort and convenience of
its patrons, will put on an extra sleeping during c the r
between Atlanta and New Orleans
period of the Mardi-Gras festivities at the
latter point. Di (gram** are now ready at the
office of Sir. Geo. W. Allen, T. P. A., No- make 12
Kimball House, aud those desiring to day-
this trip will do well to call on him some
in advance to secure sleeping car accommo¬
dations. Ga.
Geo. W. AlTjR.v, T. P. A., Atlanta, ft*.
,Tno. A. Gee, Gen. Pass. Agt., Atlanta,
Hattie Well anil Happy
Used to Suffer From Impure
Blood and Eruptions
W.-
w
•*s>
Mx\
Hattie Dancer
Lawrence Station, N. J.
“ Hood's Sarsaparilla oured my child of
impure blood and eruptions on the head.
She would scratch her head so that it would
Meed. The sores spread behind her ears,
and the poor child suffered terribly. X doo-
tored her the best I knew how but the sores
did not get tny better. But thanks to
Hood’s Sarsaparilla and Hood’s Olive Oint-
Hood’s*>Cures
ment, she is now well as any of the children.
She is as large and healthy as any child five
years old. This is all the medicine we better.” take,
for X do not think there is any
Gxoboe Dancer, Lawrence Station, N. J.
Hood’sPills Eas
:ect. 25c.
W.L. $3 Douglas
SHOE FIT 19 THE FOB A BEST. KING?.
£ 3 FRENCH , cordovan; AENAMELUa CALF.
r jM4*3sp pi Calf&KAngarboi
kilii] PS? KE
$3.®PPOLICE,3S0LES.
BQYS'SCHOOLSHQBl
IE5 •
£ SEND FOR CATALOGUE
IfV-L'DOUGLAfl*
DRO C KTOKUtt&SS.
Over Ono Million People wear the
W. L. Douglas $3 & $4- Shoes
All our shoes are equally satisfactory
They give the best value for the money*
They equal custom shoes in style and fit.
The The ir prices wearing are uniform,»-®stnmped qualities are unsurpassed. on sole*
From $i to $3 saved over other makes.
If your dealer cannot supply you we can.
SULLIVAN
4 CRICHTON’S a
and SCHOOL OF SHORTHAND
The tTour Best and Cheapest Time Business Catalogue College free- in America. Address
Penmen. short.
.Su!iivn.u <fc Crichton, Pryor St., Atlanta, Ga,
TOBHOSO SEEDS
gl business; largest tobacco seed farm In the
m world. Reputation of our seeds second to
■ ■ none. Catalogue mailed free. Larger num*
her of improved varieties than can ■ e found
* on any other list and at lower prices. R,
JL* RAGLAND HEED GO., Hyeo, Halifax Co.. V*
* WORLD’S-FAIR *
J HIGH EST AW ARD I
, "SUPERIOR N UTRIT ION-THE LIFE" ,
O ’
' m
THE GREAT
AA.HDI OINAL'
Has justly acquired the reputation of being
The Salvator for
Invalids
^ The-Aged.
an Incomparable Aliment for the
Growth and Protection of INFANTS am!
CHI LDREN
A superior nutritive in continued Fevers
And a reliable remedial agent
In all gastric and enteric diseases;
often in instances of consultation over
patients whose digestive and sensitive organs condition were re¬
duced to such a low
that the IMPERIAL GRANUM was
the only nourishment the stomach
would tolerate when LIFE seemed
depending on its retention
And as a FOOD it would be difficult to
conceive of anything more palatable.
Sold by DRUGGISTS. Shipping: Depot,
JOHN CARLE & SONS, New York.
NICHOLAS WARNED.
HIS SUBJECTS NOT PLEASED AT
HIS MANNER,
Anil Notify Him That He Has Lost
His Popularity.
The London Daily Chronicle prints
a oolnmn-long manifesto issued by the
people’s rights party in Bussia, and
now circulating throughout the em¬
pire. The manifesto is in the form of
a letter to the czar, and is remarkable
for plain and forcible language. After
eeusuring him for his recent assertion
of his absolutism, the letter says:
“The most advanced Zemstoves
asked only for the harmony of czar
and people, free speech and the su¬
premacy of law over the arbitrariness
of the executive. You were deceived
and frightened by the representations
of the courtiers and bureaucrats. So¬
ciety will understand perfectly that it
was the bureaucracy which jealously
guards its own omnipotence that spok6
through yon. The bureaucracy, be¬
ginning with the council of ministers
and ending with the lower country
constables, hates any development,
social or individual, and pre¬
vents the monarch’s free in¬
tercourse with representatives of his
people, except as they come in gala
dress, presenting congratulations and
offerings.
“Your speech proved that any at¬
tempt to speak out before the throne,
even in the most loyal form, about the
crying needs of the country meets on¬
ly a rough and abrupt rebuff. Society
expected from you encouragement and
help, but beard only a reminder of
your omnipotence, giving the impres¬
sion of utter estrangement of czar
from people. You yourself have killed
your own popularity, and have alien¬
ated all that part of society which is
peacefully struggling forward. Some
individuals are jubilant over your
speech, but you will soon discover their
importance. In another section of
society your speech caused a feeling
of injury and depression which, how¬
ever, the best social forces soon will
overcome, before proceeding to the
peaceful but obstinate and deliberate
struggle necessary to liberty. In an¬
other section your words will stimu¬
late the readiness to continue the
struggle against the present hateful
state of things with any means. You
were the first to begin the straggle.
’Ere long, we will proceed.”
TELEGRAPHIC BREVITIES.
Heavy snows have blockaded rail¬
roads and highways in the interior of
Newfoundland.
It is said that Mexico’s negotiations
with Guatemala are proceeding slowly
but on the whole satisfactorily.
A committee of the New York legis¬
lature is now investigating the recent
street car strike in Brooklyn.
At Evansville, Ind., Captain John
Inglo was appointed receiver for the
Evansville, Paducah and Tennessee
Biver Paekett company.
At New Orleans a mistrial has been
entered in the case of ex-Councilman
Thriifiley, on trial for proposing to
receive a bribe from Superintendent
Marshall of the L. & N. railroad.
At a meeting of District Assembly
75, K. of L., it was voted to call off
the strike on the trolley railroads in
Brooklyn, N. Y., with the exception
of the Atlantic Avenue company’s sys¬
tem.
The destitution in St. Johns, N. F.,
is increasing. Between 5,000 and
6,000 persons are not receiving relief.
The government announces its inten¬
tion of proceeding with relief works
at once.
At Pueblo, Mexico, four of the pris¬
oners implicated in the Scott camp
shooting affair were shot by order of
Captain Fragoso. Nearly all the ban¬
dits have now been captured or killed.
At Fall Biver, Mass., the agent of
the Chace mills has agreed to pay his
weavers for all cloth woven in a print
cut over forty-six yards long. A strike
had been ordered at the mill by the
Weavers’ Union, but the concession is
deemed satisfactory.
At Duluth, Minn., William McKin¬
ley, one of the best known men in
northern Minnesota, and a heavy owner
in mining and lumber lands all over
the country, has made an assignment.
The liabilities aie estimated at from
$300,000 to $600,000, while the assets
are small.
At Milwaukee, Wis., the J. Ober-
man Brewing company has gone into
the hands of a receiver, and will be
continued in operation under the di¬
rection of Judge Johnson. J. Ober-
man, individually, has also made a
voluntary assignment. The assign¬
ment of the company is for $120,000.
Beferee W. G. Choate, of Brooklyn,
has decided that ex-Boss McKane, of
Gravesend, now in Sing-Sing, swindled
the widow of Paul Bauer out of large
sums of money and that he must make
restitution. Paul Bauer was Mc-
Kane’s friend and the latter adminis¬
tered on his estate.
PACKING COMPANY GOES UNDER
The John Moran Company, of St. Jo¬
seph, Makes a Deed of Trust.
The John Moran Packing Company
at St. Joseph, Mo., has given a deed
of trust on all its property in that city,
John Donovan, Jr., being named as
trustee. This action was caused by
the depression in business for some
months past.
The trust was executed in favor of
the State National bank of St. Joseph,
which holds notes to the amount of
$50,000 against the company to secure
the St. Joseph Stock Yards Company.
VUm of Owr Corn* I Crops.
The report of the statistician . of th«
agricultural department concerning
the area, produot and value of the ce-
real crops for 1894, which has recently
been published, contains some very
significant figures. The report states
that the com crop of the year is one
of the lowest on record, the yield per
acre being but 19.4 bushels. The area
harvested in the corn-produoing states
has been reduced by severe drought
and dry winds to 62,582,000 acres from
the 76,000,000 acres planted. Ihe
crop has been about 1,212,7/0,000
bushels, and the estimated value is
fixed at $354,719,000. The wheat crop
is slightly above the average. The
entire produot of the country is 460,3
267,416 bushels, which is valued at
$225,902,025. This represents the en-
tire product of 84,882,436 acres. The
rate of yield has been 13.2 bushels pel
acre, and the average value per bushel
49.1 oents. ihe estimates of the area,
product and value of the other crops
are as follows:
The estimates for oats are: Area,
27,023,553 acres; product, 662,086,928
bushels; value, $214,816,920; yield
per acre, 24.5 bushols.
Area, 1,944,780 acres; prod-
uct, 26,727,615 bushels; value, $13,-
394,476.
Barley—Area, 3,170,602 acres; prod¬
uct, 61,400,463 bushels; value, $27,
134,127.
Buckwheat—Area, 789,232 acres
product, 12,668,200 bushels; value,
$7,040,230.
Potatoes—Area, 2,737,973 acres;
product, 170,787,338 bushels; value,
$91,526,787.
Hay—Area, 48,321,272 acres; prod¬
uct, 54,874,408 tons; value, $468,578,-
321.
Tobacco—Area, 623,103 acres; prod¬
uct, 406,678,385 pounds; value, $27,-
760,739 .—Scientific American.
Columbus and the Historic Egg.
At last science has demonstrated how
our discoverer made his egg stand on
end and secured the means by which
to make his expedition a success.
The egg was first laid down on its
side on a plate and the dish moved
about with the hand in a circle till the
egg catches onto the movement and
begins to rotate on a sidewise axis; as
the speed is made to increase it is
gradually brought upon its tip end,
spinning like a top, when the plate
can be placed on the table with the
egg on end in a condition that would
well illustrate the earth on its polar
axis.
AN ALPENA MIRACLE.
SIRS. .IAS. M. TODD, OF LONG RAPIDS,
DISCARDS HER CRUTCHES.
In an Interview with a Reporter Slie Re¬
views Her Experience Hnd Telia
the Real Cause of the Miracle.
(From the Argus, Alpena. Mich.)
We have long known Mrs. Jas. M. Todd,
of Long Rapids’, Alpena Co.,' Mich. She has
been a sad cripple. Many of her friends
know the story of her recovery; for the bene¬
fit of those who do not we publish it to-day.
Eight years ago she was taken with ner¬
vous prostration, and in a few months with
muscular and inflammatory rheumatism. It
affected her heart, then her head. Her feet
became so swollen she could wear nothing
on them; her hands were drawn all out of
shape. Her eyes were swollen shut more
than half the time, her knee joints terribly
swollen and for eighteen months she had to
be held up to bo dressed. One limb became
entirely helpless, and the skin was so dry
and cracked that it would bleed. During
these eight years she had been treated by a
score of physicians, and has also spent much
time at Ann Arbor under best medical advice.
All said her trouble was brought on by hard
work and that medicine would not cure, and
that rest was the only thing which would
ease her. After going to live with her daugh¬
ter she became entirely helpless and could
not even raise her arms to cover herself at
night. The interesting part of the story fol¬
lows in her own words:
“I was urged to try Dr. Williams’ Pink
Pills for Pale Peoplo and at last did so. in
three days after I commenced taking Pink
Pills I could sit up and dress myself, and
after using them six weeks I went home and
commenced working. I continued taking
the pills, until now I begin to forget my
crutches, without aid. and I can go up and down wonder, steps
of doors am truly a living
walking out without assistance.
those “Now, if have I can say anything to induce
who suffered as I have, to try
Pink Pills, I shall gladly do so. If other
like sufferers will will try Pink Pills according to
directions, they have reason to thank
God for oreating men who are able to con¬
quer that terrible disease, rheumatism. I
have in my own neighborhood recommended
Pink Pills for the after effects of la grippe,
and weak women with impure blood, and
with good results.”
Mrs. Todd is very strong in her faith in the
curative powers of Pink Pills, and says they
have brought a poor, helpless cripple back to
do her own milking, churning, washing, sew¬
ing, knitting and in fact about all of her
household duties, thanks to Dr. Williams’
Pink Pills.
Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills contain all the ele¬
ments neoessary to give new life and richness
to the blood and restore shattered nerves.
They are for sale by all druggists, or may be
had by mail from Dr. Williams’ Medicine
Company, box, Schenectady, boxes for $2.50. N. X., for 60c. per
or six
Beware of Ointments for Catarrh That
Contain Mercury»
as mercury will surely destroy the sense of
smell and completely it derange the the whole sys¬
tem when entering through mucous sur¬
faces. Such articles should never be used ex¬
cept on prescriptions he damage they from will reputable do is ten fold physi¬ to
cians, as t possibly derive from them.
the good you can manufactured F. J.
Hall’s Catarrh Cure Toledo, O., contains by
Cheney & Co., internally, no directly mer¬
cury, and is taken acting of the
upon the blood and mucous surfaces
system In the buying genuine. Hall’s Catarrh internally, Cure he
sure to get It is taken
and is made in Toledo, Ohio, by F. J. Cheney
& Co. Testimonials free. bottle.
ISTSold by Druggists, price 75c. per
For Whooping remedy.—M Cough, Piso’s Cure 67 is Throop a suc¬
cessful P. Dieter,
Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y„ Nov. 14, ’94.
Mrs. Winslow’s Soothing Syrup for children
teething, softens the gums, reduces inflamma¬
tion, allays pain, cures wind colic. 25c. a bottle
Karl’s Clover Root, the great bloo l complex¬ purifier,
gives freshness and clearness to the
ion and cures constipation, 25 cts., 50 cts., $1.
If afflicted with sore eyes use Dr. Isaac Thomr*-
sou’s Eye- water. Druggists sail ai 25 c pur bottle.
Mr tai 11,1 C»rp«ta.
Lowell parties are reported t* be ex*
p er j men ting with a prooess for making
me t a i]j 0 yarns for us* in carpets. The
prooesg oonsists of a foundation of a
me t a j coating on an inferior surface,
aQ q weaving the strands in certain
proport j on8 . The object is to secure
greater durability and strength than it
is poggible to obtain from the use of
yams made from our animal or vege-
table fiberg A nou-oxidizable metal
j g employed and this is dissolved and
Bpplied to the Rllr f ao( , s 0 f threads, ren-
dering them like metal in appearance
ftn( j g enerft i characteristics. The me-
tallic composition is composed of ala-
m i n i um , borax, alum, litharge and
wax These compounded with white
j ea( j all d one or two other substances
pro d UC e a metallic coating that it is as
fl ox j b i e an d soft as common paint
would be, yet to all appearances the
CO vering is as metal, very muoh re¬
gemb ij ng aluminum. Various sub-
stances can be used for the core or
bo dy 0 f the thread, among others wood
pulp, jute, cotton, flax, eto. The me-
tttllio coat i ng i„ applied to the yarns
automatically in a device consisting of
a ohamber in wbich the ingredients
gr0 puti au( j through which the yarns
are drawn, the coating adhering to the
turface of t he threads .—Industrial
World.
The Blood-Curdllug Yell.
Mrs. Strongmind—"What would the
men say if 1,000,000 women
should rise in their righteous wrath
and demand the ballot at the point of
the bayonet? (abstractedly)—
Mr. Strongmind
Oh, rats, I suppose.— Truth.
An Important Difference.
To make it apparent to thousands, who think
themselves ill, that they are not affected with
any disease, but that the system simply needs
cleansing, is to bring comfort home to their
hearts, as a costive condition is easily cured by
using Syrup of Figs. Manufactured by the
California Fig Syrup Co.
Good address and pleasing manner always
express a truth to best advantage.
The Standard
remedy for all stomach and tabule liver gives complaints relief,
is Ripans Tubules. One after
but in severe cases one should he taken
each meal until the trouble has disappeared.
The Greatest fledical Discovery
of the Age.
KENNEDY’S
Medical Discovery.
DONALD KENNEDY, OF ROXBURY, MASS. i
Has discovered In one of our common
pasture weeds a remedy that cures every
kind of Humor, from the worst Scrofula
down to a common pimple.
He has tried it in oyer eleven hundred
cases, and never failed except in two cases
(both thunder humor). He has now in
his possession oyer two hundred certifi¬
cates of its value, all within twenty miles
of Boston. Send postal card for book.
A benefit is always experienced from the
first bottle, and a perfect euro is warranted
when the right quantity is taken.
When the lungs are affected it cause*
shooting pains, like needles passing
through them; the same with the Liver
or BowelB. This is caused by the ducts
being stopped, and always disappears in a
week after taking it. Bead the label.
If the stomach is foul or bilious it will
cause squeamish feelings at first
No change of diet ever neoessary. Eat
the best you can get, and enough of it.
Dose, one tablespoonful in water at bed¬
time. Sold by all Druggists.
WALTER BAKER & CO.
The Largest Manufacturers of
PURE, H9CH GRADE
COCOAS AND CHOCOLATES
On this Continent, hava received
HIGHEST AWARDS
from the great
Mustria anil Food
; V EXPOSITIONS
ip liM Europe am Amorioa.
^ZgYica r Lnliketho other Dutch Chemicals Procesz,no Dyes Alka-
or or are
‘^5 used in nnv of their preparation*,
Their deli icious BREAKFAST COCOA is absolutely
pure and so Jluble, and costs less than one cent a cup.
SOLD BY GROCERS EVERYWHERE.
WALTER BAKER & GO. DORCHESTER. MASS.
Boiled Milk.
Some very interesting experiments
have lately been made in France by
Dr. Chamouin in the line of boiling
milk to free it from being a means of
infection and contagion. There has
been a great prejudice in this country
against boiled milk for infant feeding,
but the idea that the boiling process
does away with the nourishing proper¬
ties and digestibility is done aWRy
with by Dr. Chamouin’s experiments.
He fed a number of kittens on boiled
milk and a number on fresh milk.
Those fed on the boiled milk were
twice ns fat and healthy as those fed
on fresh milk.
He further carried on experiments
in Haris which assured him that the
infant death rate could be made much
less, were the thousands of infants
hand fed, given boiled milk instead of
fresh milk.
This series of experiments has been
very interesting from the reason that
boiled milk has been used, with un¬
qualified success, in rearing my own
babies, as fat and healthy a set as one
could desire. The amount of milk
used in a day was placed in a fire
crock and boiled. The thick top or
scum lifted off and the crock covered
and put away safely, was all there was
as to trouble. A tiny granite sauce¬
pan held just enough for a meal and
that meal was slightly warmed, not
heated hot, before putting it into the
bottle.
Boiling milk is, indeed, a simple
precaution against the bowel ailments
of infants, so simple every mother
should try it.— Womankind.
Smoking and Sense.
Edison says that when he is busy
and deeply’absorbed in his work he con¬
sumes about twenty cigars a day; when
he is less active mentally, about ten.
They are always strong cigars. The
inventor says that this excessive smok¬
ing has never, so far as he can discov¬
er, done him any harm, and if it did
he wo aid be certain to stop the habit.
His family has been one of smokers,
his grandfather, who livjed to be 108,
having been an inveterate smoker and
a chewer of tobacco as well .—Public
Opinion.
Stuffed Beefsteak.
Vary the old methods of cooking
steak by trying this. Hake a nice
dressing as for turkey or chicken; lay
it in steak, roll and tie ai both ends.
Put in pan as a roast in a little cold
water. Add a lump of hatter, put in¬
side the stove and basts frequently.
Thicken gravy with bread crumbs and
season.
Worn-Out Lands
quickly restored to fertility by the use of fertilizers containing
A High Per Cent, of Potash.
Full description of how and why in our pamphlets.
They are sent free. It will cost you nothing to read them, and they will save yon
io.Lr . GERMAN KALI WORKS, 93 Nassau Street- New '■ n-'<
Consumption
was formerly pronounced incurable. Now it is not In all
of the early stages of the disease
Scott’s Emulsion
‘i*: will effect n core quicker than any other
known specific. Scott’s Emulsion pro¬
motes the making of healthy lung-tissue,
relieves inflammation, overcomes the excess¬
ive waste of the disease and gives vital
strength.
For doughs, Golds, Weak Lungs, Sore Throat,
Bronchitis, Consumption, Sorofula, Anaemia,
Loss of Flesh and Wasting Diseases of Children.
Buy only the genuine with our trade*
TRADE MARK. mark on salmon-colored wrapper.
Send for pamphlet on Scott's Emulsion. FREE.
Soott A Bowne, N. Y. All Druggists. SO oents and SI.
■
• -V■■ • . •
Do You Wish
the Finest Bread
and Cake?
It is conceded that the Royal Baking Powder i
the purest and strongest of all the baking powders
The purest baking powder makes the finest, sweel
est, most delicious food. The strongest baking pow
der makes the lightest food.
That baking powder which is both purest an
strongest makes the most digestible and wholesom
food.
Why should not every housekeeper avail herse!
of the baking powder which will give her the be
food with the least trouble ?
Avoid all baking powders sold with, a gil
or prize, or at a lower price than the Royal
as they invariably contain alum, lime or sul
phuric acid, and render the food unwholesome
Certain protection from alum baking powders cai
be had by declining to accept any substitute for th«
Royal, which is absolutely pure.
Fast Living.
The most remarkable instt
rapid growth is said to be recoi
the French academy in 1729.
a boy six years of age, 5 feet 6
in height. At the age of five h
changed, at six his beard had
and he appeared a man of thirt
possessed great physical strengf
could easily lift to his should*
carry bags of grain weighin
hundred pounds. His decline
rapid as his growth. At eight h
and beard were gray; at ten 1
tered in his walk, his teeth fe
and his hands became palsie
twelve he died with every oii
sign of extreme old age .—Timet
Register.
THE ONWARD HARCh
of Consumpt:
stopped Pierce’s short 1
fjw Golden
ical Discover;
r SjLA jgJ you haven’t w
pj J beyond re a
5*1 there’s cotnple’
J covery and cur(
believed Although by
v to be
& r able, there i
1 evidence of hun
mm of living witnesi i
the fact that,
its earlier stages
'ff disease. sumption is a ri;
Not i
case, bnt a largi
y? centage believe, of cases full
** we
per cent, are
by Dr. Pierce’s Golden Medical Discc
even after the disease has progress,
far as to induce repeated bleedings
the lungs, severe lingering cough
copious expectoration (including and tut
lar matter), great loss of flesh ex'
emaciation and weakness.
Do you doubt that hundreds of such
reported to us as cured by 1 ‘ Golden
ical Discovery ” were genuine cases c
dread and fatal disease ? You need no
our word for it. They have, in nearly
instance, been so pronounced by thi
and most experienced home physi^
who have no interest whatever in ,
representing prejudiced them, and who advised were
strongly “Golden and ; ag
a trial of Medical D > COT
but wlio have been forced to c-nfes;
it surpasses, in curative powe.' ovej
fatal malady, all other mefbei Nasty nes
which liver oil they and are its acquainted/' filthy “ eAulsions
mixtures, had been tried i» nearly all
cases and liad either utterly failed to
fit, or had only seemed M benefit a lit
a short time. Extract of malt, wli
and various preparations of the hyp.
phites had also been faithfully tried ii
The photographs of a large numl
those cured of consumption, bron
lingering coughs, asthma, chronic
catarrh and kindred maladies, hav.
skillfully which reproduced will be mailed in a to book .
pages you,
ceipt of address and six cents in s
You can then write those cured an.
their experience. AddressWoRi.n’s E
sary Medical Association, Bufial
A,<
ll
V
K] 5
SHE WAS BLIND.
A blindness comes to mo n<
then. I have It now. It is quee
nee your eyee but not your nose,
read because some of the lett i
blurred; dark spots cover ther
mighty uncomfortable.
I know all nbout it; it’s DYSP
Teke ono of theee; it will cur.
ten minutes.
Whit is It?
A • Ripans • Tabi
1* MONSj
evToNICPE
TREATMENT 25
At all stores, or by mail 25o. double box;
$ 1 . 00 . BROWN CO., New
A. N. D......
- ??fis‘i
RES WHERE ALI lira
Best Go ugh Syrup. Sold b * ’aatos druggist Go-
in time. r